Federalism-Based Limitations on Congressional Power: an Overview
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Federalism-Based Limitations on Congressional Power: An Overview Andrew Nolan, Coordinator Section Research Manager Kevin M. Lewis, Coordinator Legislative Attorney Jay B. Sykes Legislative Attorney Wilson C. Freeman Legislative Attorney Kevin J. Hickey Legislative Attorney September 27, 2018 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov R45323 SUMMARY R45323 Federalism-Based Limitations on September 27, 2018 Congressional Power: An Overview Andrew Nolan, The U.S. Constitution establishes a system of dual sovereignty between the states and the federal Coordinator government, with each state having its own government, endowed with all the functions essential Section Research Manager to separate and independent existence. Although the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution [email protected] designates “the Laws of the United States” as “the supreme Law of the Land,” other provisions of Kevin M. Lewis, the Constitution—as well as legal principles undergirding those provisions—nonetheless prohibit Coordinator the national government from enacting certain types of laws that impinge upon state sovereignty. Legislative Attorney The various principles that delineate the proper boundaries between the powers of the federal and [email protected] state governments are collectively known as “federalism.” Federalism-based restrictions that the Constitution imposes on the national government’s ability to enact legislation may inform Jay B. Sykes Congress’s work in any number of areas of law in which the states and the federal government Legislative Attorney dually operate. [email protected] Wilson C. Freeman There are two central ways in which the Constitution imposes federalism-based limitations on Legislative Attorney Congress’s powers. First, Congress’s powers are restricted by and to the terms of express grants [email protected] of power in the Constitution, which thereby establish internal constraints on the federal Kevin J. Hickey government’s authority. The Constitution explicitly grants Congress a limited set of carefully Legislative Attorney defined enumerated powers, while reserving most other legislative powers to the states. As a [email protected] result, Congress may not enact any legislation that exceeds the scope of its limited enumerated powers. That said, Congress’s enumerated powers nevertheless do authorize the federal For a copy of the full report, government to enact legislation that may significantly influence the scope of power exercised by please call 7-5700 or visit the states. For instance, subject to certain restrictions, Congress may utilize its taxing and www.crs.gov. spending powers to encourage states to undertake certain types of actions that Congress might otherwise lack the constitutional authority to undertake on its own. Similarly, the Supreme Court has interpreted the Constitution’s Commerce Clause to afford Congress substantial (but not unlimited) authority to regulate certain purely intrastate economic activities that substantially affect interstate commerce in the aggregate. Congress may also enact certain types of legislation in order to implement international treaties. Additionally, pursuant to a collection of constitutional amendments ratified shortly after the Civil War, Congress may directly regulate the states in limited respects in order to prevent states from depriving persons of certain procedural and substantive rights. Finally, the Necessary and Proper Clause augments Congress’s enumerated powers by empowering the federal government to enact laws that are “necessary and proper” to execute its express powers. In addition to the internal constraints on Congress’s authority, the Constitution also imposes external limitations on Congress’s powers vis-à-vis the states—that is, affirmative prohibitions on certain types of federal actions found elsewhere in the text or structure of the Constitution. The Supreme Court has recognized, for instance, that the national government may not commandeer the states’ authority for its own purposes by forcing a state’s legislature or executive to implement federal commands. Nor may Congress apply undue pressure to coerce states into taking actions they are otherwise disinclined to take. Furthermore, the principle of state sovereign immunity—which limits the circumstances in which a state may be forced to defend itself against a lawsuit against its will—imposes significant constraints on Congress’s ability to subject states to suit. Finally, the Supreme Court has recognized limits to the extent to which Congress may subject some states to more onerous regulatory burdens than other states. Congressional Research Service Federalism-Based Limitations on Congressional Power: An Overview Contents General Principles ........................................................................................................................... 2 Internal Federalism Limitations on Congress’s Powers .................................................................. 4 Spending Clause ........................................................................................................................ 4 Commerce Clause ..................................................................................................................... 6 Regulating the Channels of Interstate Commerce ............................................................... 7 Protecting the Instrumentalities, Persons, or Things in Interstate Commerce .................... 8 Regulating Activities that Substantially Affect Interstate Commerce ................................. 9 Regulating Inactivity ......................................................................................................... 10 Treaty Power ........................................................................................................................... 12 Congress’s Powers Under the Civil War Amendments ........................................................... 14 The State Action Requirement .......................................................................................... 16 “Congruence and Proportionality” for Remedial Legislation ........................................... 17 Necessary and Proper Clause .................................................................................................. 20 External Federalism Limitations on Congress’s Powers ............................................................... 24 The “Anti-Commandeering” Doctrine .................................................................................... 25 Limits on the Spending Power ................................................................................................ 28 Clear Notice ...................................................................................................................... 29 Relatedness ....................................................................................................................... 30 Independent Constitutional Bar ........................................................................................ 31 The “Anti-Coercion” Doctrine .......................................................................................... 32 The Eleventh Amendment and State Sovereign Immunity ..................................................... 35 Equal Sovereignty Doctrine .................................................................................................... 42 Contacts Author Contact Information .......................................................................................................... 47 Congressional Research Service Federalism-Based Limitations on Congressional Power: An Overview he Constitution establishes a “system of dual sovereignty between the States and the Federal Government,”1 with each state having its “own government,” “endowed with all T the functions essential to separate and independent existence.”2 As the Supreme Court has recognized, states “possess sovereignty concurrent with that of the Federal Government, subject only to limitations imposed by the Supremacy Clause,”3 the provision of the Constitution that makes federal law the “supreme Law of the Land” and prohibits states from contravening lawful enactments of Congress.4 Although the Supremacy Clause grants Congress a degree of authority to “impose its will on the States,” the federal government may not exceed “the powers granted it under the Constitution.”5 The Constitution only endows the federal government with a “limited” and “defined” set of enumerated powers,6 while reserving most other powers to the states.7 As a consequence, “States retain broad autonomy in structuring their governments and pursuing legislative objectives.”8 The various principles that delineate the proper boundaries between the powers of the federal and state governments are collectively known as “federalism,”9 a doctrine based on the Framers’ conclusion that allocating “powers between the National Government and the States enhances freedom, first by protecting the integrity of the governments themselves, and second by protecting the people, from whom all governmental powers are derived.”10 Federalism has informed modern understandings of the limits on Congress’s authority in a number of areas. For instance, the Supreme Court has identified limits on Congress’s enumerated powers, such as its power to regulate interstate commerce under Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution.11 The Court has also recognized other federalism-based doctrines that constrain Congress’s power, such